- Don't look back
- Is support for OSS optional in your business?
- Nokia N810 Tablet + WiMax
- Vendors need to right-size their products
- Dolphins Invade Sun Campus!
- State of Open Source
- MySQL Workbench: open source data modeling
- Comments on The 451 Group's Database Report & Red Hat's 4Q revenue
- Kaplan: Guiding open source in IT
- Can the transportation market teach us anything about the software market?
March 11, 2008 | Comments: (0)
The No-Brainer $100 Treo Upgrade
After deliberating all the different smartphone choices in recent weeks, I finally came to a decision. Or in some sense, the decision came to me through the convergence of two events: The antennna on my long-suffering Treo 650 broke off and AT&T shipped a GSM version of the Treo Centro.
If you're looking for the latest dope smartphone (is that an oxymoron?) with state of the art UI, Wi-Fi capabilities, high-speed browsing or Windows Mobile then skip out and don't bother with the Centro. But if you're a long-time Treo user, then let me tell you why this is a no-brainer upgrade.
I'm a long-time user of the Palm OS, going back to the original Palm Pilot. I'm not only a loyal user, I'm probably too loyal. But my guess is that there are a lot of other long-time users of the Palm Treo who could benefit from the Centro. Here's what you get:
-Weighs only 4.2 oz (50% lighter than the 650)
-Smaller than an iPhone
-No bulky external antenna
-Decent keyboard for email, messaging
-Standard palm apps for calendar, contacts, etc
-Miserable crappy slow browser
-Same old Palm OS but more stable (not a single crash in 2 weeks)
-Better voice quality than the Treo 650
-Slightly better camera
-Slightly faster email using AT&T's Edge non-3G network
If you're on Sprint or AT&T it's a $100 upgrade to get a phone that is smaller, better, more reliable and faster. And if you're upgrading from an existing Palm device, it's relatively painless: Backup, resync and get back to work.
The only drawbacks I've found are:
-The Centro uses a Micro-SD card, not the older, large SD
-Battery life is shorter, so spring for a spare
-My wife called it a "chick phone"
I can live with that.
Posted by Zack Urlocker on March 11, 2008 09:06 PM
RATE THIS ARTICLE:
-

- COMMENTS
Zach,
that is not technically called an upgrade. It is pretty much like doing an upgrade from Windows XP to Windows 95 :-) You have to move on, the Palm OS is dead. Mobile Linux is your next thing, I bet.
fabrizio
Posted by: Fabrizio Capobianco at March 12, 2008 08:18 AMZack,
that is not technically called an upgrade. It is pretty much like doing an upgrade from Windows XP to Windows 95 :-) You have to move on, the Palm OS is dead. Mobile Linux is your next thing, I bet.
fabrizio
Posted by: Fabrizio Capobianco at March 12, 2008 08:19 AMZack,
Why didn't you look at the BlackBerry Curve (8310 or 8320)?
Why do you hate Canada? ;-)
Posted by: Savio Rodrigues at March 12, 2008 10:46 AM
- Get Started
- Port 25 Blogs
- OSS News
- Join a Project
{Open Source} Heroes Happen Here
Start today and order your own Hero Hack Pack – which includes Getting Started with Open Source, Windows Server 2008 and Visual Studio 2008 Trial. Each pack is a chance to win a free pass to OSCON 2008.
TOP STORIES
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

- Remote Access: Maintain Security and Decrease the Burden on IT
- Beyond AntiVirus: Symantec Endpoint Protection
- What Every Enterprise Needs to Know About VDI

- Disaster Recovery in Minutes
- Protecting Microsoft(R) Applications
- Reduce Recovery Times and Tape Costs








